2010–11 UCI Asia Tour
Seventh edition of the UCI Asia Tour | |
Details | |
---|---|
Dates | 10 October 2010 –30 September 2011 |
Location | Asia |
Rounds | 34 |
Champions | |
Individual champion | Mehdi Sohrabi (IRI) (Tabriz Petrochemical Team) |
Teams' champion | Tabriz Petrochemical Team |
Nations' champion | Iran |
← 2009–10 2011–12 → |
The 2010–11 UCI Asia Tour was the 7th season of the UCI Asia Tour. The season began on 10 October 2010 with the Kumamoto International Road Race and ended on 30 September 2011 with the Golan II.
The points leader, based on the cumulative results of previous races, wears the UCI Asia Tour cycling jersey. Mehdi Sohrabi from Iran was the defending champion of the 2009–10 UCI Asia Tour and was crowned as the 2010–11 UCI Asia Tour champion.
Throughout the season, points are awarded to the top finishers of stages within stage races and the final general classification standings of each of the stages races and one-day events. The quality and complexity of a race also determines how many points are awarded to the top finishers, the higher the UCI rating of a race, the more points are awarded.
The UCI ratings from highest to lowest are as follows:
- Multi-day events: 2.HC, 2.1 and 2.2
- One-day events: 1.HC, 1.1 and 1.2
Events
2010
Date | Race Name | Location | UCI Rating | Winner | Team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 October | Kumamoto International Road Race | Japan | 1.2 | Takashi Miyazawa (JPN) | CDC–Cavaliere |
11–19 October | Tour of Hainan | China | 2.HC | Valentin Iglinsky (KAZ) | Astana |
22–24 October | Tour de Seoul | South Korea | 2.2 | Tomasz Marczynski (POL) | CCC–Polsat–Polkowice |
23 October | Tour of Taihu Lake | China | 1.2 | David Kemp (AUS) | Fly V Australia |
24 October | Japan Cup | Japan | 1.HC | Dan Martin (IRL) | Garmin–Transitions |
24 October–3 November | Tour d'Indonesia | Indonesia | 2.2 | Herwin Jaya (INA) | Polygon Sweet Nice |
13–14 November | Tour de Okinawa | Japan | 2.2 | Shinichi Fukushima (JPN) | Geumsan Ginseng Asia |
12 December | Tour of South China Sea | China Hong Kong Macau | 1.2 | Kazuhiro Mori (JPN) | Aisan Racing Team |
2011
Final standings
Individual classification
Rank | Name | Team | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Mehdi Sohrabi (IRI) | Tabriz Petrochemical Team | 327 |
2. | Muradjan Khalmuratov (UZB) | Giant Kenda Cycling Team | 239 |
3. | Amir Zargari (IRI) | Azad University Iran | 218 |
4. | Libardo Niño (COL) | LeTua Cycling Team | 208 |
5. | Boris Shpilevsky (RUS) | Tabriz Petrochemical Team | 203 |
6. | Gregor Gazvoda (SLO) | Perutnina Ptuj | 183 |
7. | Yukiya Arashiro (JPN) | Team Europcar | 172 |
8. | Andrea Guardini (ITA) | Farnese Vini–Neri Sottoli | 167 |
9. | Hossein Askari (IRI) | Tabriz Petrochemical Team | 153 |
10. | Rahim Ememi (IRI) | Azad University Iran | 149 |
Team classification
Rank | Team | Points |
---|---|---|
1. | Tabriz Petrochemical Team | 1183 |
2. | Azad University Iran | 663 |
3. | Giant Kenda Cycling Team | 594.67 |
4. | Terengganu Cycling Team | 371 |
5. | Farnese Vini–Neri Sottoli | 340 |
6. | Aisan Racing Team | 302 |
7. | LeTua Cycling Team | 292 |
8. | CCC–Polsat–Polkowice | 272 |
9. | Perutnina Ptuj | 267 |
10. | D'Angelo & Antenucci–Nippo | 266 |
Nation classification
Rank | Nation | Points |
---|---|---|
1. | Iran | 1436 |
2. | Japan | 1012 |
3. | Uzbekistan | 449 |
4. | Malaysia | 374 |
5. | Kazakhstan | 348 |
6. | South Korea | 287 |
7. | Syria | 210 |
8. | Indonesia | 206.34 |
9. | Hong Kong | 200 |
10. | Kyrgyzstan | 160 |
Nation under-23 classification
Rank | Nation under-23 | Points |
---|---|---|
1. | Malaysia | 169 |
2. | South Korea | 152 |
3. | Kazakhstan | 123 |
4. | Hong Kong | 100 |
5. | Mongolia | 81 |
6. | China | 48 |
7. | Iran | 35 |
8. | Japan | 33 |
9. | Thailand | 26 |
10. | Indonesia | 22 |
External links
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